A new month inextricably means a new Longines Ranking! The cards are firmly shuffled now that the results of the Olympic Games are taken into account. The new ranking takes into account results from September 1, 2023 to August 31, 2024.
Henrik von Eckermann (SWE) is holding firm to his leadership position, which he has now filled for 26 consecutive months. Steve Guerdat (SUI), winner of the individual silver medal in Paris, jumps from four to two. Ben Maher (GBR), good for team gold in Paris and individual gold in Tokyo, thus drops to three.
Julien Epaillard (FRA) trades his fifth place for four, while Christian Kukuk (GER) rises from ten to five! No doubt his individual gold medal from Paris will be in between for something. Max Kühner (AUT) is seen dropping from three to six while Mclain Ward jumps from twelve to seven. Martin Fuchs (SUI) does one place better than last month and is at eight, swapping places with Richard Vogel (GER). Kent Farrington (USA) concludes the top ten, coming from six.
Lorenzo de Luca (ITA) also confirms his good form by consolidating his position in the ranking, rising from thirty-seven to thirty. Aaron Vale (USA) does no less than twenty places better and enters the top fifty new with his fortieth place, coming from sixty.
Henrik von Eckermann (SWE) is holding firm to his leadership position, which he has now filled for 26 consecutive months. Steve Guerdat (SUI), winner of the individual silver medal in Paris, jumps from four to two. Ben Maher (GBR), good for team gold in Paris and individual gold in Tokyo, thus drops to three.
Julien Epaillard (FRA) trades his fifth place for four, while Christian Kukuk (GER) rises from ten to five! No doubt his individual gold medal from Paris will be in between for something. Max Kühner (AUT) is seen dropping from three to six while Mclain Ward jumps from twelve to seven. Martin Fuchs (SUI) does one place better than last month and is at eight, swapping places with Richard Vogel (GER). Kent Farrington (USA) concludes the top ten, coming from six.
Lorenzo de Luca (ITA) also confirms his good form by consolidating his position in the ranking, rising from thirty-seven to thirty. Aaron Vale (USA) does no less than twenty places better and enters the top fifty new with his fortieth place, coming from sixty.